Ecological Efficiency Question

Started by DMD-2-B
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DMD-2-B

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I ran across this question and was wondering what you guys thought the answer was. I thought it was pretty simple till I saw I got it wrong, so I'd like to hear your strategies for attacking this one if you don't mind!

The ecological efficiency is only 5% from one trophic level to the next. For every 250 J of energy required by the secondary consumers, what is the minimum amount of energy the primary producers will have to generate?
 
DMD-2-B said:
I ran across this question and was wondering what you guys thought the answer was. I thought it was pretty simple till I saw I got it wrong, so I'd like to hear your strategies for attacking this one if you don't mind!

The ecological efficiency is only 5% from one trophic level to the next. For every 250 J of energy required by the secondary consumers, what is the minimum amount of energy the primary producers will have to generate?

250 / 0.05 = 5000
5000 / 0.05 = 100000
 
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keibee82 said:
250 / 0.05 = 5000
5000 / 0.05 = 100000

Yes, you did it right. I still don't really understand though. My point of confusion is why divide by .05 twice? I divided only once, thinking that 250 is the five percent that was passed down from the original 5000.

Clearly I am overlooking something. Would you mind explaining the reasoning?

Thanks! 👍
 
DMD-2-B said:
Yes, you did it right. I still don't really understand though. My point of confusion is why divide by .05 twice? I divided only once, thinking that 250 is the five percent that was passed down from the original 5000.

Clearly I am overlooking something. Would you mind explaining the reasoning?

Thanks! 👍
dividing it once only give the minimum for the primary consumer, the question wants the minimum for the primary producer.